The Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas reported its general business activity index for
manufacturing in Texas rose to -3.0 in July from an unrevised -6.1 in June,
pointing to continuing improvement in Texas factory activity in July following
a record contraction in the spring.
Economists had
forecast the indicator to increase to -4.9.
According to
the report, the production index, a key measure of state manufacturing
conditions, rose to 16.1 from 13.6 in June, suggesting a slight pickup in the
pace of output growth. The new orders index climbed four points to 6.9, also
pointing to slightly accelerating growth this month. The capacity utilization
and shipments indexes rose to 14.0 and 17.3, respectively, their highest
readings in nearly a year. The employment index grew to 3.1 from -1.5, marking
its first positive reading since January and indicating modest growth in
employment. Meanwhile, perceptions of broader business conditions were mixed in
July: the general business activity index edged up to -3.0 from -6.1, but remained
slightly negative, while the company outlook index increased three points to
5.9, recording its second consecutive positive reading, and the index measuring
uncertainty regarding companies’ outlooks climbed to 20.9 from 9.1, with more
than a third of manufacturing executives indicating increased uncertainty from
June.